
Tom Riley
TOM RILEY is a retiree living on 12 acres in Pittstown. There he gardens, bakes, boils maple syrup, grows hops, and makes pizzas in a wood-fired oven. He is currently constructing poems exploring 60 years of living on the same rural road.
The Dark Gray Morning
Articles/Essays – Volume 24, No. 3
The dark gray morning has its eye on you
Forget about the stormy
you have more pressing worries. What to do?
The dark gray morning has its eye on you
Manna in the Desert
Articles/Essays – Volume 25, No. 4
“The satisfaction brought by morning dew
is more than human stomachs can endure,”
the men insist, hoping that they will die.
“The satisfaction brought by morning dew
Triple A’s
Articles/Essays – Volume 38, No. 4
He himself is the present he is wrapping
under the starlit branches of the sky.
This, of course, is a truth that needs no trapping:
it is apparent to the naked eye.
The Elect
Articles/Essays – Volume 38, No. 4
The righteous pagans cursed our easy grace.
We shrugged and smiled and knew salvation well.
Looking our wounded savior in the face,
the righteous pagans cursed our easy grace.
Scriptum Est
Articles/Essays – Volume 38, No. 4
He read us stories from a book as blank
as a white sky. (He couldn’t read the sky,
however.) Words marched forward, rank on rank:
he read us stories from a book as blank